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memenodes
Elon: you can text and drive

Tesla owners: https://t.co/IQ4rcZd2ga
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memenodes
2026 will be my year

2026: https://t.co/zFUBNFsSMR
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Fiscal.ai
Happy Retirement to Warren Buffett.

The greatest to ever do it. https://t.co/WbPr6EamH1
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The Few Bets That Matter
Growing up is the most beautiful campaign the Duffer Brothers could give us.

The ending doesn't matter. The journey did.

Thank you. https://t.co/Qxkz1krbCD
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Fiscal.ai
The 10 worst performing stocks in the S&P 500 in 2025:

1. The Trade Desk $TTD (-67.5%)
2. Fiserv $FISV (-67.2%)
3. Alexandria Real Estate $ARE (-49.1%)
4. Deckers Brands $DECK (-47.4%)
5. Gartner $IT (-46.5%)
6. Lululemon $LULU (-44%)
7. Dow Inc. $DOW (-39.3%)
8. LyondellBasell $LYB (-38%)
9. Molina Healthcare $MOH (-36.5%)
10. Factset $FDS (-34.6%)
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The Few Bets That Matter
$TMDX completed 45 flights on December 31.

The highest amount of flight in a day of its history.

And still had 12 planes stuck on the ground.
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memenodes
me in 2010 instead of claiming BTC for free https://t.co/xAsMv7uCl2

Bitcoin Price on New Year's Day:

2010: free
2011: $0.3
2012: $5
2013: $13
2014: $770
2015: $314
2016: $434
2017: $1,019
2018: $15,321
2019: $3,794
2020: $7,193
2021: $29,352
2022: $47,025
2023: $16,630
2024: $42,660
2025: $93,500
2026: $87,500
- Watcher.Guru
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the strongest hoe in history vs the strongest hoe of today

damn i got competition now
- Sophie Rain
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EndGame Macro
Where We Are in the Historical Cycle

As I read up more on the long rhythms of human societies, I see the quote

“Hard times create strong men, strong men create good times, good times create weak men, and weak men create hard times”

as a compressed historical insight. Stripped of its modern internet life, it echoes an older observation made by thinkers like Ibn Khaldun and Polybius where civilizations move in cycles, not straight lines. They harden under pressure, flourish under order, loosen under comfort, and fracture under excess. The phrasing is blunt, but the pattern repeats across centuries.

That is why the quote aligns so closely with the Strauss & Howe framework laid out in The Fourth Turning. Their argument isn’t mystical or predictive so much as observational. Anglo-American history unfolds in recurring long cycles of roughly 80 to 100 years, about the span of a human life. Each saeculum contains four turnings, comparable to seasons with a High, an Awakening, an Unraveling, and a Crisis. Each turning shapes a generation, and each generation, once in power, reshapes the society that follows.

Hard times In The Fourth Turning

The Fourth Turning, the Crisis corresponds to the quote’s opening line where hard times create strong men. This is winter in the cycle, when accumulated contradictions finally break open. Institutions that once seemed permanent reveal their fragility. Survival becomes the organizing principle.

History offers familiar examples

• the American Revolution
• the Civil War
• the Great Depression followed by World War II

In each case, society entered a dark night of the soul. Collective action replaced individual expression. Sacrifice became unavoidable. People coming of age in these periods were forged by necessity, not ideology. Their strength was not bravado, but competence, discipline, and a willingness to subordinate the self to survival.

Good times: The High

From that crucible emerges the High, where strong men create good times. This is spring a period of rebuilding, confidence, and institutional trust. The generation hardened by crisis now occupies leadership and designs systems meant to prevent a return to chaos.

Post World War II America is the clearest example…

• rapid growth
• expanding middle class prosperity
• faith in shared rules and institutions

These good times are built on memory. The architects of the High remember what failure looks like and construct guardrails accordingly. Yet success carries a hidden cost. As stability endures, the lived memory of hardship fades among the young.

Forgetting And Fragmentation

That forgetting marks the Awakening, when comfort allows societies to turn inward. Institutions built for order are challenged in the name of authenticity and justice. Some of this challenge is necessary. Some of it erodes shared discipline.

By the Unraveling, trust collapses. Individualism hardens into cynicism. Short term incentives replace long term stewardship. This is weakness at a societal level because coordination breaks down and problems are deferred.

Where We Are Now

Seen this way, the quote is less a moral judgment than a description of collective memory. Each turning solves the problem of the last while creating the conditions for the next…

• Crisis restores unity
• Unity breeds order
• Order invites rebellion
• Rebellion dissolves cohesion

From a Strauss & Howe perspective, we are firmly in the Crisis phase of the Fourth Turning. It began with the 2008 financial collapse and has been reinforced by pandemics, polarization, and rising geopolitical strain. As we move through 2026, we are deep in the winter of this cycle and past the initial shock, but not yet at resolution.

History shows that Crises end at an inflection point, when necessity forces unity and rebuilding. Hard times expose what no longer works and shape the generation that decides what comes next, if those lessons hold once stability returns. tweet